Hausner Gábor - Kincses Katalin Mária - Veszprémy László szerk.: A Hadtörténeti Múzeum Értesítője. Acta Musei Militaris in Hungaria. 4. „Kard és koszorú”. Ezer év magyar uralmi és katonai jelképei. (Budapest, 2001)
KATONAI JELKÉPEK - BABUCS ZOLTÁN: Jászkun katonai jelképek a XVIII. század közepétől 1867-ig. (Egyenruhák, címerek, zászlók)
Jászkun önkéntes huszárokból 13-as Jászkun-huszárok*** 3. sz. melléklet Alakulat száma és Fejfedő neve Atilla / Mente Nadrág Gombok Zsinór Szőrme Jászkun önkéntes fehér kakastollas huszárosztály, ké- vagy árvalány hasőbb 13. önkéntes jas, fekete, pörge huszárezred (1859) kalap 1859-1871 között: végső elnevezése cs.-kir. 13.Jász és Kun huszárezkucsma sötétkék leffentyűvel és kakastollal sötétkék sötétkék fehér fehér előbb fekete, később fekete-sárga feketesárga fekete fekete JAZYGIAN-CUMANIAN MILITARY SYMBOLS FROM THE MIDDLE OF THE 18™ CENTURY TO 1867 (UNIFORMS, COATS-OF-ARMS, FLAGS) The study examines the uniforms, equipment and flags symbolising the esprit de corps of the troops offered and stationed by the Jazygian-Cumanian District, from the beginning of the reign of Maria Theresa to 1867. Since their immigration in the 1240s, Jazygians and Cumanians had struggled a lot to preserve their hard-gotten privileges and their collective nobility. Their light cavalry had been so famous that Jazygian-Cumanian military gallantry was well-known from the second half of the 18 th century to the end of World War II. After emperor Leopold I mortgaged the Jazygian-Cumanian District to the Teutonic Order in 1702, Jazygian-Cumanians lost their privileges. Their independence was restored by the queen only on May 7, 1745, due to the self-redemption of the District and the thousand hussars stationed during the second Silesian war. Retrieving their previous privileges in 1745-1746 was followed by three regions and settlements of the District receiving new coats-of-arms, which, together with the unified coat-of-arms of the Tripartite District, represented symbols of military sacrifices. Flags donated by Maria Theresa in 1745 were later used again at times of insurrection (1756, 1800, 1805, 1809) by Jazygian-Cumanian hussars. During the Napoleonic wars, in 1800, Haiduk and Jazygian-Cumanian Districts stationed a hussar regiment of noble insurrectionists together, which was ranged among line hussar regiments on December 5, 1801, under number 12. Its colonel-in-chief was the palatine in power. As war insignia they used redemption flags until 1801, then the M 1792 division flag, which was followed by the M 1816 regular cavalry division flag from 1833. *** Berka 1918. 118.; Berka 1930. 56.; Ságvári - Somogyi: i. m. 132., 137-138.; Teuber-Ottenfeld: i. m. 2. kötet. 530-532, 618. **** Ezredtulajdonosa 1861-1885 között: Friedrich Liechtenstein herceg lovassági tábornok. Berka 1930. 117.; Militär Schematismus des Österreichischen Kaiserthumes für 1868. Wien, 1868. 496-497.